8 o’ clock, time
to wake up. He tore the sheets of his bed, like making his way out of a jungle.
Six layers (or so it seemed like) of different textures of silk and wool, green
and blue colours of striped shapes popped into his eyes as he stood up. Looking
back at the bed he saw the naked legs of the lady he had taken home last night.
Katrina was her name, or something of that hurricane-sort.
But
there was no time for remembrance. He had a dream, a beautiful dream, which
could not be forgotten. He walked close to his piano, his coloured piano which
reminded him of strange nights on acid, there he grabbed a blank book and
opened around page 50, from there on, there were only pages drawn with empty
pentagrams.
With
a lick on his pencil he threw the papers on the floor, along with his body and
started to write. A symphonic melody passed before him, harmonies of dark
semi-tones and white and clear octaves. Every note was a person, a feeling. Or
was it not? Every time he struck this trance, this moment of euphoric writing
of melodies, he could not stop the
dreamy state, the feeling that everything is connected, that in one low C there
is that dark dancing hip movement, and that that high B holds a kiss, a
champagne lip-fusion.
When
the draft was finished, he started to play. The piano sounded beautifully.
She woke up.
Looked at him, with her beautiful oak eyes and said while smiling, with a soft
voice: “Sounds like last night”.
Mark
stopped playing and looked at her straight: “It does”.
You captured the passion wonderfully.
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